The country has since changed its tune a bit, raising its aid offer to $1.4 million. And, as my colleague Joshua Keating points out, China is dealing with some typhoon effects of its own, including some evacuations in the country’s southern regions. Still, few consider that an excuse for a would-be global superpower to stand by while a smaller neighbor suffers the effects of a disaster of historic proportions—even if the two countries aren’t on the fondest of terms. And in fact, as our friends at the online statistics portal Statista pointed out today, a certain Swedish furniture maker has still given nearly twice as much cash as China, having raised its own offer to $2.7 million. (See the chart below for how other countries and companies stack up.)

It now seems China may finally be getting the message. Xinhua today confirmed a New York Times report that the country is finally sending its Peace Ark. The 14,000-ton ship—with its 300 beds, 20 ICUs, and eight operating theaters—will set sail on Thursday, nearly two weeks after Haiyan made landfall in the Philippines. “We hope its mission will help ease the lack of medical services in the disaster areas in the Philippines, as a token of Chinese people's friendship to the Philippine people," a foreign ministry spokesman said.